SpaceX (SPACEX) on Solana
SpaceX Price Chart
Showing SPCX (highest volume)SpaceX Variants on Solana
| Token | Issuer | Price | 24h Change | 24h Volume | Tokenized Value | Trades | |
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SPCX
SpaceX - Backpack Secu...
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Backpack Securities | $149.04 | -5.64% | $3.4M | $10.1M | 20.7K | Trade SPCX |
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tSpaceX
T-SpaceX
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- | $614.92 | -5.41% | $474.9K | $180 | 4.2K | Trade tSpaceX |
SPCXx
SpaceX xStock
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Backed | $149.31 | -5.46% | $737.5K | $83.6M | 7.4K | Trade SPCXx |
SPACEX
SpaceX PreStocks
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- | $519.34 | -7.55% | $35.2K | $4.5M | 217 | Trade SPACEX |
SPCXon
SpaceX (Ondo Tokenized...
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Ondo | - | - | No trades yet | - | 0 | Trade SPCXon |
About SpaceX on Solana
SpaceX is available on Solana through 5 bridged or wrapped variants. The most actively traded variant is SPCX (SpaceX - Backpack Securities).
Each variant represents the same underlying SpaceX asset but is issued by a different bridge or protocol. When choosing which to trade, consider liquidity, volume, and the trust level of the issuing bridge.
Popular SpaceX variants:
SpaceX news, features & analysis
Matched on exact asset name, explicit ticker mentions, or associated variant token mints.
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EchoStar Offers SpaceX Exposure at a 20% Discount to NAV
EchoStar (ECHO) has emerged as an unusual back door into SpaceX exposure after the satellite company's $42.4 billion SpaceX stake — representing roughly 65% of its total net asset value — implies a per-share value of approximately $121.46, while ECHO shares have been trading near $100. That gap amounts to a roughly 20% discount to SpaceX's implied value alone, meaning buyers effectively acquire the rest of EchoStar's assets at no additional cost.
The trade-off is leverage dilution: because EchoStar is not a pure-play vehicle, a 60% gain in SpaceX translates to only about a 38% appreciation in ECHO shares assuming the discount holds constant. CNBC noted the structure gives retail investors access to SpaceX through a standard brokerage account, but the indirect exposure means EchoStar's own operational profile and any narrowing or widening of the discount will shape actual returns as much as SpaceX's underlying performance.
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SpaceX Joins Nasdaq-100 as Fast-Track Rule Triggers $4.3 Billion in Passive Fund Buying
SpaceX was added to the Nasdaq-100 on July 7, 2026 — its 15th trading day as a public company and the first stock to qualify under Nasdaq's new fast-track inclusion rule, which allows mega-IPOs to enter the index in as few as 15 trading days rather than waiting the traditional three months or more. Despite a market capitalization comparable to Amazon, SpaceX carries roughly a 1% weighting in the index because the calculation uses free-float market capitalization, and the vast majority of shares remain locked up or held by insiders.
J.P. Morgan estimates the inclusion will trigger approximately $4.3 billion in passive buying as the QQQ and QQQM ETFs — which together manage around $570 billion — rebalance to reflect the new composition. Investors in those funds will automatically gain SpaceX exposure. Analysts expect significant near-term volatility, with index-driven buying pressure competing against upcoming lockup expirations that could release substantial insider supply into the market.
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SpaceX IPO Investors Up 8% as Stock Pulls Back From $225 High
SpaceX opened at $150 per share in what has been called the largest IPO in history, and a $1,000 investment at that price is worth approximately $1,080 today — an 8% gain over a few weeks. The stock briefly surged to $225 before pulling back to current levels around $162, while the company's market capitalization stands at roughly $2.1 trillion on $18.6 billion in 2025 revenue, implying a price-to-sales ratio of 112x.
Analysts note that SpaceX's February 2026 merger with xAI and plans to deploy AI infrastructure in space represent long-term growth levers, but caution that the premium valuation leaves limited room for near-term upside, framing the stock as a long-term hold rather than a short-term trade.
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SpaceX Stock Faces Competing Forces as Lockup Expirations and Index Demand Loom
SpaceX (SPCX) shares closed at $162, up 5.7% on the week, as the stock continues to digest its record IPO amid two conflicting near-term pressures. On the supply side, upcoming lockup expirations are expected to release substantial insider holdings over the coming months, potentially increasing selling pressure as early investors and employees become free to sell. On the demand side, SpaceX's pending inclusion in the Nasdaq-100, Russell 100, and Russell Top 200 indices is set to generate forced buying from ETFs and passive index funds that must establish positions at the revised weightings.
The company also completed a $25 billion senior notes offering shortly after its IPO, giving it significant capital but adding debt obligations to a balance sheet already characterized by heavy capital expenditures. Analysts highlight the stock's high price-to-sales multiple and its dependence on Starlink's profitability as key variables to watch alongside lockup release dates and insider sales disclosures.
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First Congressional SpaceX Stock Disclosures Surface After Record IPO
Two members of Congress have disclosed SpaceX stock purchases made in the days following the company's record-breaking IPO. Rep. Dan Meuser (R-PA), a member of the House Financial Services Committee — which oversees securities and exchanges — reported that his dependent child bought between $15,001 and $50,000 of SpaceX shares on June 15. Rep. Gil Cisneros (D-CA), who sits on the House Armed Services Committee overseeing the Department of Defense, a major SpaceX customer, separately disclosed a June 18 purchase of between $1,001 and $15,000.
SpaceX went public in June in what CNBC described as the largest IPO on record, with shares opening at $150 and the company's market value quickly surpassing $2 trillion. The two filings are expected to be among the first of many congressional disclosures, as lawmakers on both sides of the aisle face periodic financial reporting requirements in the weeks ahead.
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Bending Spoons' BSPx Is Now Live on Solana via xStocks
BSPx is the second tokenized IPO xStocks has issued, following SPCXx (SpaceX). ... The difference from the investor's perspective is that Bending Spoons is a smaller, less hyped name than SpaceX, which may mean tighter alignment between subscription demand and available supply.
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SpaceX Acquires Anysphere for $60 Billion to Build AI Infrastructure Business
SpaceX is making a $60 billion move into AI infrastructure with the acquisition of Anysphere, the company behind the Cursor AI code editor, positioning itself as what analysts are calling a "neocloud infrastructure provider" for external AI customers. The deal is paired with roughly $28 billion in annual AI compute agreements already secured with Anthropic, Google, and Reflection AI, signaling that SpaceX's revenue ambitions now extend well beyond launch services and Starlink connectivity.
The pivot reflects a deliberate strategy to monetize SpaceX's substantial compute and infrastructure capacity by supplying it to AI developers on a contract basis. Analysts note the stock currently trades around $170.86, approximately 9% below a $187.80 consensus target and an estimated 28% below one fair-value model, with investor attention now focused on how quickly AI segment revenues ramp and how Anysphere's software platform integrates with the broader infrastructure offering.
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SpaceX's $25B Bond Sale Drew $90B in Orders — But Debt Holders Face a Tough Trade-Off
SpaceX's debut $25 billion bond sale, priced on June 23, generated nearly $90 billion in orders — more than triple the initial $20 billion target — but analysts have flagged a structural tension for bondholders. The five-tranche deal, with maturities ranging from 2031 to 2056, will primarily repay a $20 billion bridge loan due September 2027, with the remainder earmarked for Starlink, Starship, and AI initiatives including the $60 billion acquisition of coding company Cursor. Longer-dated tranches priced at spreads roughly 0.4 percentage points above comparable BBB-rated debt, reflecting investor demand for a risk premium on SpaceX's aggressive capital spending.
The headache for debt investors is asymmetric exposure: bondholders bear the downside risk if SpaceX's cash burn outpaces revenue growth — Q1 revenue grew 16% year-over-year — while equity holders capture the upside from any successful mission or product milestone. Within two weeks of its IPO, SpaceX accumulated over $111 billion in combined financing ($85.7 billion equity, $25 billion bonds), an unprecedented capital formation pace that has prompted scrutiny from analysts questioning whether current spending trajectories can be sustained before the company achieves consistent profitability.
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SpaceX Faces Two Market Catalysts on July 7 as Quiet Period Expires and Nasdaq-100 Eligibility Opens
July 7 brings two separate market events for SpaceX shares that could drive notable buying activity. First, the SEC-mandated 25-calendar-day quiet period for the 21 underwriters of SpaceX's IPO — led by Goldman Sachs — expires on July 6, freeing analysts to publish research reports, initiate coverage, and issue price targets starting July 7. This lift typically generates a wave of buy recommendations from banks with a commercial interest in the offering's success.
Second, July 7 marks the first day SpaceX is eligible for fast-track inclusion in the Nasdaq-100. Under Nasdaq rules, any non-financial company that would rank among the 40 largest in the index can be added after just 15 trading days of listing — July 6 is that 15th day. Inclusion would oblige index-tracking funds to purchase SpaceX shares, potentially representing tens of billions of dollars in passive buying demand. Analysts note that any near-term price pop from these catalysts may fade once insider lockup periods begin to expire in August.
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SpaceX Set to Join Nasdaq-100 on July 7, Triggering Billions in Passive Fund Inflows
SpaceX will be added to the Nasdaq-100 index effective July 7, 2026, just weeks after its June 12 IPO — one of the fastest index inclusions on record. Nasdaq relaxed several eligibility requirements, including profitability thresholds, minimum post-IPO trading duration, and public float rules, to accommodate the addition. J.P. Morgan estimates the inclusion will generate approximately $4.3 billion in mandatory passive buying as funds tracking the Nasdaq-100, including Invesco's QQQ and QQQM, rebalance to include SpaceX shares.
For holders of tokenized SpaceX equity on Solana, the Nasdaq-100 inclusion is a structurally significant development. Index membership locks in a steady baseline of institutional demand through passive ETF replication, adds SpaceX to one of the most widely benchmarked equity indices globally, and increases price discovery visibility. This comes alongside the earlier Russell index rebalance, adding to the compounding wave of passive inflows since the IPO. The stock was trading near $153 at time of reporting, against Morningstar's fair value estimate of $62 — a premium that reflects both speculative demand and the structural buying pressure now embedded in major index products.
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